Lessons Learned for Focus Groups Methodology: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
* Allocate more time for group discussions during workshops; | * Allocate more time for group discussions during workshops; | ||
* Address a specific subject that concerns multidisciplinary stakeholders; | * Address a specific subject that concerns multidisciplinary stakeholders; | ||
* Adapt the workshop schedule and structure according to the specifics and program of the stakeholders you want to attend. | * Adapt the workshop schedule and structure according to the specifics and program of the stakeholders you want to attend; | ||
* Open university faculties, strongly connected with wind farms to help the sustainable development of renewable energy; | |||
* Carry out studies on potential impact of the investment in offshore wind energy to develop them; | |||
* Scale up research and bring responses to sustainable development of offshore wind farms with Science education; | |||
* Establish laws which are favorable for ecological investments in sustainable development of renewable energy; | |||
* Plan what to do with buildings/installations which have been created while building wind farm; | |||
* Educate children to environmental issues as well as renewable energy profits to create a new wiser society; | |||
* Consider Governance as a common responsibility of citizens and decision makers; | |||
* Educate policy-makers to science to reinforce policies and adopt coherent legislative frameworks of economic competitiveness and sustainability of offshore wind energy; | |||
* Develop societal awareness about water and advantages of use of renewable energy sources in general and offshore wind farms in particular; | |||
* Raise awareness of the general public on the environmental impact of offshore installations at all stages (building, exploitation, dismantling); | |||
* Implement program of innovative research in relation to the effectiveness of the constructions of towers and generators to to ensure sustainable development of renewable energy; | |||
* Encourage the production of socially and environmentally acceptable solutions and services with the science education of business and industry professionals; | |||
* Empower all stakeholder groups to co-create sustainable value propositions that reflect societal needs and sustain healthy marine environments thanks to RRI dimensions; | |||
* Provide a good incentive / personal benefits to motivate people to attend the workshop; | |||
* Remember that apart from being scientists, teachers, policy-makers, they are all citizens of coastal cities who want to care for the environment as a private person; | |||
* Keep in mind the local context when preparing the event to answer local needs and specificities; | |||
* Be inclusive in the words used so that non scientists participants can understand and contribute to the discussion without being overwhelmed by scientific language; | |||
* Don't interfere too much with the topic which participants chose to focus on, it mostly depends on individual needs/experience and knowledge; | |||
* Realize a complete inventory of local skills on marine biotech of academic actors, start-ups or companies already established in the region; | |||
* Create of a one-stop shop for the Institute of (Bio) Blue Technologies with short and long-term strategies; | |||
* Create an award the best Blue (bio)technologies innovation or product to make maritime biotech a sustianable economic opportunity; | |||
* Sensibilize restaurants and the public about the potential offered by the blue biotech; | |||
* Organize of a Marine biotech day at the regional level including different actors to make the general public aware on the marine biotechnology sector and its potential; | |||
* Develop new mode of governance for marine biotechnology development including the engagement of the society; | |||
* Carry the project with "Ambassadors" or " figures" at regional level (navigators, high level sportsman, divers, swimmer); | |||
* Assign participants to a specific table according to gender, type of organization/institution , type of expertise in the field, main interest in general to ensure multi-disciplinarity; | |||
* Develop new collaborations for new means of communication; | |||
* Such workshop make participants convinced about RRI, but doesn't tend to help them in the concrete application of RRI in their daily work; | |||
* Focus on the concept and its tools when explaining RRI to participants; | |||
* Multiply events where researchers from academia and industry exchange with a broader community to enhance this community and its visibility; | |||
* Coordinate and develop industrial, academic and political linkages to boost funding around marine biotech; | |||
* Exchange with star chefs on new products from the transformation of marine resources to provide the opportunity to sensibillize a wider audience; | |||
* Encourage scientists and NGOS to popularize the different aspects of marine biotechnology through science café, forums, open days etc; | |||
* Use funding programs dedicated to citizens, aimed at replacing old goods and polluting with new and environmentally friendly ones; | |||
* Define and update the legislation to prevent climate changes for Black Sea area; | |||
* Involve citizens in public consultations and decision – making for local regulations; | |||
* Improve port reception facilities and services for processing over waste from ships; | |||
* Restructuring different mechanisms in order to prevent pollution and to apply polluter sanctions, to ensure the transparency of legislative processes; | |||
* Engage stakeholders from different sectors of activity; | |||
* Promote and develop responsible and sustainable tourism in a changing environment; | |||
* Use rational the natural resources, with maximum economy; | |||
* The need for a good collaboration and interaction between civil society, policy makers, researchers, business sector and citizens, in all the Black Sea coastal countries; | |||
* Learn from education, rather than experience, is necessary to avoid climate changes impact; | |||
* Education is the most important aspect that can accelerate social change and climate change mitigation; | |||
* Including marine/environmental education in school curricula; | |||
* Create a path to open information on climate changes topic and related data; | |||
* Change unsustainable patterns of consumption and production, in order to reduce the amount of waste; | |||
* Develop campaigns for promoting sustainable fishing methods and techniques through protecting resources and other incentives/compensation; | |||
* Development of an educational platform for changing knowledge between public and private institutions; | |||
* Engage participants to apply RRI principles in daily work and daily life; | |||
* Choose a method which will produce a large amount of data on a topic in a short time; | |||
* Give to all of the participants the opportunity to discuss and generate ideas; | |||
* Try to obtain clear actions from people from different areas of interest, but with a common purpose; | |||
* Present the topic approached from the beginning of the workshop; | |||
* Offer a clear explanation of the methodology used in order to be as clear as possible for the participants; | |||
* Allocate time for every participant to present his/her idea and to discuss it in plenum; | |||
* Invite and encourage different stakeholders to participate at this kind of workshops; | |||
* Developing a spatial plan specific to zoning of areas of offshore renewables; | |||
* Have proactive public participation from stakeholders, in particular from governance and industry; | |||
* Develop a GIS information database; | |||
* Develop a clear communications strategy; | |||
* Encourage and promote marine involvement for all stakeholders; | |||
* Develop a stakeholder engagement plan; | |||
* Make scientific information reliable and easily accessible to citizens and stakeholders; | |||
* Ethical issues are highly important in maintaining the sustainable operation of the vessels while safeguarding the environment; | |||
* Raise awareness and embed RRI into educational curricula; | |||
* Create procedures for an open access to data and data exchange, to allow for multiple feedback from end-users and the policy-makers; | |||
* Disseminate widely local and regional regulations and type approvals since the businesses often have significant knowledge gaps; | |||
* Business stakeholders are mostly interested on the policy agendas; | |||
* Be aware about the participants motivations to attend a workshop such as to learn from others participants; | |||
* Continue to engage the stakeholders for knowledge exchange after the workshop; | |||
* Make the workshops highly participatory and interactive; | |||
* Facilitate fruitful discussions and widely disseminate conclusions to third parties; | |||
* Push for multi-stakeholders' representation and input from all relevant actors; | |||
* Attract private investment and develop national projects; | |||
* Attract students into engineering courses; | |||
* Build the appropriate infrastructure and technology for the Wave Energy Sector; | |||
* Present the MML and RRI approach; | |||
* Create the opportunity to network and discuss, in order to identify the key marine and societal challenges for the Wave Energy Sector; | |||
* Involve all the interested stakeholders; | |||
* Recruit participants based on their interest, research, business or private experience in Marine Spatial Planning MSP and or Offshore Energy. | |||
* Make a clear presentation of the debated issue and its current status; | |||
* Stimulate and ensure open dialogue among the attendees; | |||
* Increase the level of awareness of Marine Spatial Planning process and it's implication in coastal communities and for all stakeholders; | |||
* Develop a clear understanding around MSP and what its implications are for all stakeholders groups including offshore wind; | |||
* Open data for all interested stakeholders; | |||
* Use of research and data sets to ensure that decisions are made to safeguard the interests of all stakeholders; | |||
* Promote best practice cross sectoral stakeholder engagement processes through webinars; | |||
* Use of different communications platforms/technologies to communicate with stakeholders and make data accessible ; | |||
* Use new communications channels and IT technologies as opportunities to engage with communities; | |||
* Develop webinars for cross-sectoral stakeholder engagement; | |||
* Plan the programme to encourage as much opportunity for interactions between participants; | |||
* Use methods that offer to the participants the opportunity to interact and to have open discussions; | |||
* Explain the method used to the participants as clearly and in a shorter time; | |||
* Offer an incentive for citizens in order to attract people to attend at the workshop; | |||
* Choose a familiar methodology for participants; | |||
* Plan the stakeholders carefully to ensure that the right people, stakeholder groups and organisations are in the room; | |||
* The need for a national strategy for coastal management in general, and coastal protection in specific, to overcome current fragmentation; | |||
* It's necessary the implementation of a coherent national monitoring programme; | |||
* It's difficult to deliver a coastal protection strategy that is fit for purpose by all stakeholders; | |||
* It's necessary to develop a long-term and cross-cutting strategic planning; | |||
* Use of the outcomes of the national monitoring programme as part of a targeted national awareness raising campaign; | |||
* Inform and educate wider society of the impacts, challenges and potential solutions for coastal protection; | |||
* Assess / quantify the social, economic and environmental risks; | |||
* Engage local communities at awareness raising events; | |||
* Find a topic which will attract different stakeholders; | |||
* Use a method that gives the opportunity to all of the participants to express their opinion; | |||
* Find the best way to incorporate the multi-disciplinary element into the organisation of the workshop; | |||
* Capture the content in a way that is more free-flowing which is later interpreted by the workshop team. | |||
Revision as of 00:41, 3 December 2018
- Contribute with knowledge and conceptual frameworks that support interaction, collaboration and holistic recommendations based on research based experience;
- Identify easy-to-implement solutions to attract people and harbour-related businesses in innovative harbour development;
- Push for broad vision for industrial harbour development by local governments inviting non-harbour stakeholders to contribute in new ways;
- Make regulations for developers and investors for securing more liveable areas in harbour transformations;
- Take into consideration new types of ownership forms in order to kick-start of development;
- Describe the workshop topic with clear and concrete examples of the subject using storyteling;
- Allocate sufficient time for discussions and to involve all participants interests and ideas;
- Identify common working initiatives between municipalities and the civil societies, so that citizens may be actively involved;
- Engage all interested stakeholders in harbour development;
- Develop sustainable and long-term solutions even if they do not entirely focus on technical and/or economic aspects, but add lifestyle qualities and/or facilities;
- Develop new methods of governance for engaging citizens through public awareness and politics;
- Develop case studies on how municipalities work with climate change projects and community driven innovation;
- Develop tools for engaging citizens in urban development and communicate them broadly to inspire local communities;
- Involve citizens in the political/technical systems;
- Create new models for evaluating risks and economic issues;
- To allocate time for every participant to present his/her own idea and to discuss it in plenum;
- The immersive climate change symbolizes a new age with new complicated needs and demands;
- Develop new models and ways of collaborating on climate change in order to create common knowledge and more awareness of climate change in public mind;
- Develop concrete examples that stakeholders can understand and get involved;
- Make the MARINA platform a case study platform where collaborative coastal climate solution projects are presented;
- Activate citizens as a resourceful group of action that could lead to a more innovative and including society;
- Use dialog for initiating collaboration among private landowners and municipalities;
- Allow different perspectives on the subject, which will lead to a common background for further discussion;
- Allocate more time for group discussions during workshops;
- Address a specific subject that concerns multidisciplinary stakeholders;
- Adapt the workshop schedule and structure according to the specifics and program of the stakeholders you want to attend;
- Open university faculties, strongly connected with wind farms to help the sustainable development of renewable energy;
- Carry out studies on potential impact of the investment in offshore wind energy to develop them;
- Scale up research and bring responses to sustainable development of offshore wind farms with Science education;
- Establish laws which are favorable for ecological investments in sustainable development of renewable energy;
- Plan what to do with buildings/installations which have been created while building wind farm;
- Educate children to environmental issues as well as renewable energy profits to create a new wiser society;
- Consider Governance as a common responsibility of citizens and decision makers;
- Educate policy-makers to science to reinforce policies and adopt coherent legislative frameworks of economic competitiveness and sustainability of offshore wind energy;
- Develop societal awareness about water and advantages of use of renewable energy sources in general and offshore wind farms in particular;
- Raise awareness of the general public on the environmental impact of offshore installations at all stages (building, exploitation, dismantling);
- Implement program of innovative research in relation to the effectiveness of the constructions of towers and generators to to ensure sustainable development of renewable energy;
- Encourage the production of socially and environmentally acceptable solutions and services with the science education of business and industry professionals;
- Empower all stakeholder groups to co-create sustainable value propositions that reflect societal needs and sustain healthy marine environments thanks to RRI dimensions;
- Provide a good incentive / personal benefits to motivate people to attend the workshop;
- Remember that apart from being scientists, teachers, policy-makers, they are all citizens of coastal cities who want to care for the environment as a private person;
- Keep in mind the local context when preparing the event to answer local needs and specificities;
- Be inclusive in the words used so that non scientists participants can understand and contribute to the discussion without being overwhelmed by scientific language;
- Don't interfere too much with the topic which participants chose to focus on, it mostly depends on individual needs/experience and knowledge;
- Realize a complete inventory of local skills on marine biotech of academic actors, start-ups or companies already established in the region;
- Create of a one-stop shop for the Institute of (Bio) Blue Technologies with short and long-term strategies;
- Create an award the best Blue (bio)technologies innovation or product to make maritime biotech a sustianable economic opportunity;
- Sensibilize restaurants and the public about the potential offered by the blue biotech;
- Organize of a Marine biotech day at the regional level including different actors to make the general public aware on the marine biotechnology sector and its potential;
- Develop new mode of governance for marine biotechnology development including the engagement of the society;
- Carry the project with "Ambassadors" or " figures" at regional level (navigators, high level sportsman, divers, swimmer);
- Assign participants to a specific table according to gender, type of organization/institution , type of expertise in the field, main interest in general to ensure multi-disciplinarity;
- Develop new collaborations for new means of communication;
- Such workshop make participants convinced about RRI, but doesn't tend to help them in the concrete application of RRI in their daily work;
- Focus on the concept and its tools when explaining RRI to participants;
- Multiply events where researchers from academia and industry exchange with a broader community to enhance this community and its visibility;
- Coordinate and develop industrial, academic and political linkages to boost funding around marine biotech;
- Exchange with star chefs on new products from the transformation of marine resources to provide the opportunity to sensibillize a wider audience;
- Encourage scientists and NGOS to popularize the different aspects of marine biotechnology through science café, forums, open days etc;
- Use funding programs dedicated to citizens, aimed at replacing old goods and polluting with new and environmentally friendly ones;
- Define and update the legislation to prevent climate changes for Black Sea area;
- Involve citizens in public consultations and decision – making for local regulations;
- Improve port reception facilities and services for processing over waste from ships;
- Restructuring different mechanisms in order to prevent pollution and to apply polluter sanctions, to ensure the transparency of legislative processes;
- Engage stakeholders from different sectors of activity;
- Promote and develop responsible and sustainable tourism in a changing environment;
- Use rational the natural resources, with maximum economy;
- The need for a good collaboration and interaction between civil society, policy makers, researchers, business sector and citizens, in all the Black Sea coastal countries;
- Learn from education, rather than experience, is necessary to avoid climate changes impact;
- Education is the most important aspect that can accelerate social change and climate change mitigation;
- Including marine/environmental education in school curricula;
- Create a path to open information on climate changes topic and related data;
- Change unsustainable patterns of consumption and production, in order to reduce the amount of waste;
- Develop campaigns for promoting sustainable fishing methods and techniques through protecting resources and other incentives/compensation;
- Development of an educational platform for changing knowledge between public and private institutions;
- Engage participants to apply RRI principles in daily work and daily life;
- Choose a method which will produce a large amount of data on a topic in a short time;
- Give to all of the participants the opportunity to discuss and generate ideas;
- Try to obtain clear actions from people from different areas of interest, but with a common purpose;
- Present the topic approached from the beginning of the workshop;
- Offer a clear explanation of the methodology used in order to be as clear as possible for the participants;
- Allocate time for every participant to present his/her idea and to discuss it in plenum;
- Invite and encourage different stakeholders to participate at this kind of workshops;
- Developing a spatial plan specific to zoning of areas of offshore renewables;
- Have proactive public participation from stakeholders, in particular from governance and industry;
- Develop a GIS information database;
- Develop a clear communications strategy;
- Encourage and promote marine involvement for all stakeholders;
- Develop a stakeholder engagement plan;
- Make scientific information reliable and easily accessible to citizens and stakeholders;
- Ethical issues are highly important in maintaining the sustainable operation of the vessels while safeguarding the environment;
- Raise awareness and embed RRI into educational curricula;
- Create procedures for an open access to data and data exchange, to allow for multiple feedback from end-users and the policy-makers;
- Disseminate widely local and regional regulations and type approvals since the businesses often have significant knowledge gaps;
- Business stakeholders are mostly interested on the policy agendas;
- Be aware about the participants motivations to attend a workshop such as to learn from others participants;
- Continue to engage the stakeholders for knowledge exchange after the workshop;
- Make the workshops highly participatory and interactive;
- Facilitate fruitful discussions and widely disseminate conclusions to third parties;
- Push for multi-stakeholders' representation and input from all relevant actors;
- Attract private investment and develop national projects;
- Attract students into engineering courses;
- Build the appropriate infrastructure and technology for the Wave Energy Sector;
- Present the MML and RRI approach;
- Create the opportunity to network and discuss, in order to identify the key marine and societal challenges for the Wave Energy Sector;
- Involve all the interested stakeholders;
- Recruit participants based on their interest, research, business or private experience in Marine Spatial Planning MSP and or Offshore Energy.
- Make a clear presentation of the debated issue and its current status;
- Stimulate and ensure open dialogue among the attendees;
- Increase the level of awareness of Marine Spatial Planning process and it's implication in coastal communities and for all stakeholders;
- Develop a clear understanding around MSP and what its implications are for all stakeholders groups including offshore wind;
- Open data for all interested stakeholders;
- Use of research and data sets to ensure that decisions are made to safeguard the interests of all stakeholders;
- Promote best practice cross sectoral stakeholder engagement processes through webinars;
- Use of different communications platforms/technologies to communicate with stakeholders and make data accessible ;
- Use new communications channels and IT technologies as opportunities to engage with communities;
- Develop webinars for cross-sectoral stakeholder engagement;
- Plan the programme to encourage as much opportunity for interactions between participants;
- Use methods that offer to the participants the opportunity to interact and to have open discussions;
- Explain the method used to the participants as clearly and in a shorter time;
- Offer an incentive for citizens in order to attract people to attend at the workshop;
- Choose a familiar methodology for participants;
- Plan the stakeholders carefully to ensure that the right people, stakeholder groups and organisations are in the room;
- The need for a national strategy for coastal management in general, and coastal protection in specific, to overcome current fragmentation;
- It's necessary the implementation of a coherent national monitoring programme;
- It's difficult to deliver a coastal protection strategy that is fit for purpose by all stakeholders;
- It's necessary to develop a long-term and cross-cutting strategic planning;
- Use of the outcomes of the national monitoring programme as part of a targeted national awareness raising campaign;
- Inform and educate wider society of the impacts, challenges and potential solutions for coastal protection;
- Assess / quantify the social, economic and environmental risks;
- Engage local communities at awareness raising events;
- Find a topic which will attract different stakeholders;
- Use a method that gives the opportunity to all of the participants to express their opinion;
- Find the best way to incorporate the multi-disciplinary element into the organisation of the workshop;
- Capture the content in a way that is more free-flowing which is later interpreted by the workshop team.